113 S.E. 637 | S.C. | 1922
September 1, 1922. The opinion of the Court was delivered by This was an action for damages on account of alleged false imprisonment arising out of the following facts:
On or about the 20th of January, 1921, F.S. Strickland, a police officer, the chief of detectives of the City of Columbia, received a report of the commission of a the robbery at a store in Washington Street in said City. The information was conveyed to him by a negro boy who worked "in the front of the Regal Drug Store" as a "soda jerker." *327 The boy claimed to have been held up at the point of a pistol and "robbed of what cash was in the register that night" and gave the officer a description of the man who had committed the crime. The officer proceeded to investigate, and the next day had the boy with him the greater part of the morning looking for this man. After the boy had left him, Detective Strickland saw Mr. Bushardt, the plaintiff in this action, standing at the post office wearing an overcoat that filled the description given him. The officer did not immediately arrest Mr. Bushardt, but invited him to get in the car with him and drive down the street, telling Bushardt, that he wished to have a party look at him. Bushardt did not know Strickland was a police officer, went with him willingly, and makes no claim that he was then subjected to restraint or compulsion of any kind. They drove to the Regal Drug Store. The negro boy, the "soda jerker," was called out, and "after Bushardt had got on the ground" the boy said, "That is the man." The officer asked Bushardt to go in the store, get down behind the counter, and stand at the cash register. The boy was cautioned to be "sure." He insisted that Bushardt was the man who held him up. The plaintiff testified:
"He [the boy] said, `Carry him on; I know that is the man.' Upon that statement Mr. Strickland carried me on to the city jail."
Mr. Strickland, who testified as a witness for plaintiff, said:
"On the strength of that identification, I took him to jail. The boy identified the man — that was all. Upon his saying that was the man and to hold him, I did so."
The plaintiff, who was a non-resident white man about 28 years of age, and, as the record indicates, of good character, was held in jail until the following morning, when he was discharged by the recorder. He then brought this action against the defendant, the corporation that owns and *328 operates the Regal Drug Store, for false imprisonment. From judgment on verdict for plaintiff the defendant appeals.
The appellant's second exception is directed to the refusal of the defendant's motion for a non-suit. It is charged that the Circuit Judge erred in not granting a non-suit, in that:
"(a) The evidence showed conclusively that the arrest and detention were legal; there being no disputed facts to submit to the jury.
"(b) There is no evidence from which it can be inferred that the employee was acting in the interest of his master — the defendant — instead of himself personally, it being remembered that the servant who reported the robbery to the officer and made the identification was the one himself who was held up.
"(c) There is no evidence that the defendant authorized, acquiesced in, or ratified the acts of its employee, or that the employee was acting within the scope of his employment. Instead, the evidence affirmatively shows that no one but the servant himself had anything to do with the matter, and that, too, at the bidding of the police."
Respondent objects to the consideration of this exception upon the ground that the case does not disclose that the motion for nonsuit was reduced to writing by the moving counsel, or by the stenographer under the direction of the Court, and the grounds thereof stated, as required by Rule 18 (33 S.E., 8) of the Circuit Court. The case contains this statement: "At the close of the testimony, defendant moved for a nonsuit, which after argument, was refused." It is well settled that this Court will not consider an exception that is not supported by the record. Hicks v. So. Ry. Co.,
"If it should be said that the `case' does not show that the respondent complied with the requirement of Rule 18 of the Circuit Court, that the specific grounds upon which the demurrer rested should be pointed out, a sufficient answer would be that it does not appear that any such question was either raised or passed upon by the Circuit Judge, and hence this Court cannot consider it. Besides, in the absence of any showing to that effect in the `case,' this Court would have no right to assume that a party has disregarded the rules of Court."
In Stanford v. Cud,
"It is not necessary to repeat the requests to charge, the grounds of a motion for nonsuit, or the grounds of appeal to the Circuit Court, as is often done. A simple statement in the record to the effect that they are correctly set outing the exceptions is sufficient."
While in this case it is not expressly stated in the record that the grounds of the motion for nonsuit are correctly set forth in the exceptions, in perfecting the appeal the case and exceptions must have been served in due course upon respondent's counsel. They were thereby notified that this Court would be asked to review the refusal of the motion for nonsuit duly noted in the case upon the grounds set out *330 in Exception 2. If the grounds set out in that exception were not a correct presentation of the ground assigned for the motion as made on Circuit, respondent's counsel should have taken steps in apt time to have the case amended and settled so as to show the facts affirmatively. There can be no doubt that where an appeal involves the trial Judge's ruling on a motion for nonsuit, in the absence of an express agreement in the case to the effect that the grounds are correctly set out in the exceptions, the better practice is to incorporate in the case the grounds of the motion and the trial Judge's ruling thereon, to the end that this Court may not be called upon to consider grounds for nonsuit which may be embodied in the exceptions, but which were not in fact ruled upon by the Court below. See Hicks v. So. Ry.,supra. But the mere fact that the grounds of the motion are not set out in the case is not sufficient to warrant this Court in indulging in a presumption that the exception directed to the Judge's refusal of the nonsuit does not correctly present the grounds of the motion as made on Circuit. We are therefore constrained to hold that appellant's Exception 2 should be considered on its merits.
The first ground upon which this exception predicates error in refusing the motion for nonsuit is that "the evidence showed conclusively that the arrest and detention were legal." It has been definitely decided in this jurisdiction that where one is "properly arrested by lawful authority," "an action for false imprisonment cannot be maintained against the party causing the arrest." Barfieldv. Coker,
The defendant introduced no evidence, and the facts are undisputed. Under the well-settled rule, if only one reasonable or legitimate inference can be drawn from the evidence, the question is one of law for the Court.Ford v. Kelsey, 4 Rich., 365.
The plaintiff was charged with the commission of a felony, and was subjected to arrest and detention by a peace officer without a warrant. There is no evidentiary basis for a contention that the defendant, through any of its agent and servants, actively participated in the actual seizure or detention of the plaintiff's person. The fact is uncontroverted that the arrest was made and the detention enforced by the police officer alone; the defendant's only connection therewith being through the identification, accusation, and request for arrest made by its employee, the "soda jerker." The lawfulness of the arrest and detention must therefore depend upon the right of the officer to arrest and detain the plaintiff in the circumstances, and the test to be applied is the same as if this action for false imprisonment had been brought against the officer, Strickland, alone.
The first point of the inquiry is as to nature and extent of the peace officer's authority. There can be no doubt that the common law "recognized the right of a peace officer *332
to arrest without a warrant one whom he had reasonable or probable ground to suspect of having committed a felony, even though the suspected person was innocent, and although no felony had been committed." Price v. Tehan,
"A peace officer may arrest without a warrant one whom he has reasonable and probable grounds to suspect of having committed a felony, even though the suspected person is innocent." 5 C.J., 399.
"The reasonable and probable grounds that will justify an officer in arresting without warrant one whom he suspects of felony must be such as would actuate a reasonable man acting in good faith." 5 C.J., 417.
For an elaborate review of the authorities upon this subject, see the dissenting opinion of Mr. Justice Cothran inFalls v. Palmetto Power Light Co. (S.C.);
Even "private persons are permitted to arrest, where a felony has been committed and there are reasonable grounds to suspect the party arrested to be the felon." *334
"Suspicion" implies a belief or opinion as to guilt based upon facts or circumstances which do not amount to proof. See Century Dict. The test of the sufficiency of the facts and circumstances to justify the arrest is whether they were such as would actuate a man of ordinary reason and prudence in the officer's situation, acting in good faith in the discharge of the officer's duties. 5 C.J., 417.
Applying these principles to the undisputed facts of the case at bar, most strongly construed in favor of the plaintiff's contentions, we are unable to resist the conclusion that the plaintiff was lawfully arrested and detained by a peace officer in the discharge of his duty. The arrest was made upon positive and explicit information that a felony had been committed within the officer's jurisdiction plaintiff as the person who had committed the crime. The only possible ground for impeaching the validity of the arrest and detention is that the information was untrustworthy and was derived from an unreliable source. The test is, Does the evidence warrant a reasonable inference that a man of ordinary sense and prudence, situated as was Strickland and engaged in the performance of his official duties, would not have relied and acted upon the information? The evidence is that Strickland, the head of the detective force of the City, acted only after investigation. He had his informant, the alleged victim of the holdup, with him for the greater part of the morning after the robbery. He had opportunity to check up the boy's story and to form an opinion of his honesty and veracity. He first located the plaintiff from a description previously given him by the boy. Following this the plaintiff was positively identified by the boy under conditions favorable to a reliable identification. The officer had opportunity to observe the plaintiff's conduct under the accusation made. There is no evidence that the robbery was not committed, and none that *335 there was any other source of information available as to the commission of the crime or as to the identity of the perpetrator. The staging of a holdup does not provide for the participation of reliable third parties as witnesses.
The fact that the informant and victim was a negro and the person charged a white man does not warrant an inference that the information was of so unreliable a character that the officer was not justified in acting thereon. The law is not a respecter of persons, and its administration should not be open to the criticism that members of a race who have no part in its official enforcement are denied the consideration and protection to which they are justly entitled. The plaintiff having been positively identified by the one person who was in position to identify him as the robber, two courses were open to the officer; one to turn the supposed felon loose until a warrant could be secured, and the other to hold him. In the absence of circumstances known to the officer, sufficient reasonably to discredit the information received, as to which there is no evidence in this case, we think there is no escape from the conclusion that Strickland was not only warranted in acting upon the information that he had received, but would have been guilty of dereliction to duty if he failed to do so. If justified in acting upon the information, the arrest by the officer and the detention until the prisoner could be taken before the Recorder the next morning were lawful. If the arrest and detention were lawful, the plaintiff's cause of action for false imprisonment was not established, and the nonsuit should have been granted upon that ground.
But, even if the arrest and detention of the plaintiff were not lawful, we think defendant was entitled to a nonsuit upon the second ground assigned (subdivisions "b" and "c" of Exception 2), viz.: that the relation of the master and servant shown to exist between the soda clerk and the defendant did not, under the facts *336
established, impose upon the defendant as master liability for the conduct of the servant in causing the arrest and detention of plaintiff. There is not a scintilla of evidence that any agent or servant of the defendant corporation other than the negro boy employed as a "soda jerker" had anything whatever to do with the arrest or detention of the plaintiff. It is well settled that the liability of a principal for the act of the agent in instituting a malicious prosecution or causing a false arrest or imprisonment is dependent on whether the principal previously authorized the act, or subsequently ratified it, or whether the act was within the scope of the agent's employment." Note, Fisher v.Westmoreland, Ann. Cas., 1914B, 638. There is no evidence to support an inference that the conduct of the negro boy in the case at bar was previously authorized or subsequently ratified by any one connected in any capacity with the defendant. The only basis upon which the responsibility of the defendant can be predicated is that the act of the boy is causing the arrest and detention of the plaintiff was within the scope of his employment as a clerk in the drug store. It is inferable from the testimony that the "cash in the register," alleged to have been taken by the robber, was in the custody of the boy at the time of the robbery, and was the property of the defendant. But robbery is an offense both against the person and against the property. It was not only the personal right of the boy, but his duty in the circumstances to take steps to apprehend the supposed felon and to bring him to justice. The nature of the alleged crime charged it with a peculiar personal interest for the boy. In the absence of any fact or circumstances tending to established that the boy was acting for his employer and not for himself, it certainly cannot be assumed that he acted in this matter as a servant engaged in the master's business, and not on his own initiative and on his own account. In the case of Falls v. Palmetto Power Light *337 Co., supra, this Court held that where there was testimony that the agent who instigated the arrest of a supposed thief was the general manager of the company, and was acting "on account of the company's business," the question of the agent's authority to bind the company was for the jury. Here no general authority to act for the master is to be inferred from the nature of the servant's employment. It would seem clear that a mere soda counter clerk in a drugstore has no implied authority as such to institute criminal proceedings upon a charge of felony on behalf of the master. As to implying such authority from the fact that the stolen property at the time of the robbery was in the boy's custody, we think the case clearly falls within the principle announced and implied by this Court in Simmons v. OkeeteeClub,
The conclusion that the motion for nonsuit should have been granted renders unnecessary a consideration of the other exceptions.
The judgment of the Circuit Court is reversed, and the cause is remanded for appropriate entry of judgment under Rule 27 (90 S.E., xii).
Reversed. *338